2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

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James
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2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#1 Post by James »

2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

Pretty bad line up this year. What to see besides 35 rhums and perhaps Still Walking or United Red Army?
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Michael Kerpan
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#2 Post by Michael Kerpan »

I might love LEE Yoon-ki's My Dear Enemy even more than Kore'eda's Still Walking. Two of my favorite recent films.
James
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#3 Post by James »

Michael Kerpan wrote:I might love LEE Yoon-ki's My Dear Enemy even more than Kore'eda's Still Walking. Two of my favorite recent films.
Really? It sounded cool and earned a comparison to one of my favorite contemporary movies, Lost in Translation, so I may just check it out, thanks.
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kinjitsu
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#4 Post by kinjitsu »

james wrote:
Michael Kerpan wrote:I might love LEE Yoon-ki's My Dear Enemy even more than Kore'eda's Still Walking. Two of my favorite recent films.
Really? It sounded cool and earned a comparison to one of my favorite contemporary movies, Lost in Translation, so I may just check it out, thanks.
Wakamatsu's United Red Army would be at the top of my list having already seen Still Walking, which I much preferred to My Dear Enemy.

My Dear Enemy compared favorably to Lost in Translation?
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Fierias
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#5 Post by Fierias »

In the 'International Showcase,' Adhen is very good, and I've heard that dos Santos' Unmade Beds is very good (his Glue is a gem).
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foggy eyes
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#6 Post by foggy eyes »

james wrote:What to see besides 35 rhums and perhaps Still Walking or United Red Army?
Our Beloved Month of August has been picking up astonishingly good notices, so you'd probably be a fool to miss it...
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fiddlesticks
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#7 Post by fiddlesticks »

kinjitsu wrote:My Dear Enemy compared favorably to Lost in Translation?
For what it may be worth, I liked My Dear Enemy quite a bit more than Lost in Translation. It's a terrific film.

Full disclosure: I am a very big fan of both LEE Yoon-ki and JEON Do-yeon.
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#8 Post by kinjitsu »

fiddlesticks, I was just fishing for clarification from james.
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Michael Kerpan
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#9 Post by Michael Kerpan »

Kinjitsu -- What did you not like about My Dear Enemy?
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John Cope
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#10 Post by John Cope »

foggy eyes wrote:
james wrote:What to see besides 35 rhums and perhaps Still Walking or United Red Army?
Our Beloved Month of August has been picking up astonishingly good notices, so you'd probably be a fool to miss it...
I second this recommendation. Haven't seen it yet but I've been anticipating it for months. Word on this one really is that good (though here of course I'm not including everyone as there were reports earlier this year that Academy members, who were screening it for possible inclusion in the Best Foreign Film category, walked out in droves and in much consternation apparently).
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#11 Post by James »

kinjitsu wrote:
james wrote:
Michael Kerpan wrote:I might love LEE Yoon-ki's My Dear Enemy even more than Kore'eda's Still Walking. Two of my favorite recent films.
Really? It sounded cool and earned a comparison to one of my favorite contemporary movies, Lost in Translation, so I may just check it out, thanks.
My Dear Enemy compared favorably to Lost in Translation?
The review in question just compared it to that, and said it's "able to say so much with so little". It's some website called lunapark6, but I didn't find many reviews for this one.
foggy eyes wrote:Our Beloved Month of August has been picking up astonishingly good notices, so you'd probably be a fool to miss it...
A fool, huh? I'll certainly consider it.
John Cope wrote:I second this recommendation. Haven't seen it yet but I've been anticipating it for months. Word on this one really is that good (though here of course I'm not including everyone as there were reports earlier this year that Academy members, who were screening it for possible inclusion in the Best Foreign Film category, walked out in droves and in much consternation apparently).
Considering what kind of stuff usually wins at the Academy Awards, that's not necessarily a bad thing.
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fiddlesticks
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#12 Post by fiddlesticks »

james wrote:...I didn't find many reviews for [My Dear Enemy].
Here's Darcy Paquet's review from Koreanfilm.org.
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#13 Post by James »

fiddlesticks wrote:
james wrote:...I didn't find many reviews for [My Dear Enemy].
Here's Darcy Paquet's review from Koreanfilm.org.
Thanks for that, fiddlesticks, I will have to give it a fair read when I'm not terribly tired.

Has anybody here seen Los Bastardos yet? It's receiving many comparisons to Bruno Dumont and was in Un certain regard in Cannes 2008, so I will probably try to see it.
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Anhedionisiac
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#14 Post by Anhedionisiac »

james wrote:Has anybody here seen Los Bastardos yet? It's receiving many comparisons to Bruno Dumont and was in Un certain regard in Cannes 2008, so I will probably try to see it.
I have. I guess the Bruno Dumont comparison is not completely out of place but for it to be believable it'd have to be more like if Dumont directed Funny Games
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kinjitsu
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#15 Post by kinjitsu »

Michael Kerpan wrote:What did you not like about My Dear Enemy?
Didn't say I disliked it, but much preferred Still Walking, which at least resonated for me and was a relief after the disappointing Hana yori mo naho.

I've read good things about Gomorra screenwriter Gianni di Gregorio's new film, Mid-August Lunch, but they were written by Italians, so take that with a (biased) pinch of salt.
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Michael Kerpan
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#16 Post by Michael Kerpan »

kinjitsu wrote:
Michael Kerpan wrote:What did you not like about My Dear Enemy?
Didn't say I disliked it, but much preferred Still Walking, which at least resonated for me and was a relief after the disappointing Hana yori mo naho.
Loved Still Walking, but also loved Hana yori mo naho (which didn't disappoint me at all).

I rank Kore'eda's film and Lee's film as pretty equal -- I would only choose between them if physically compelled. ;~}
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#17 Post by kinjitsu »

Feel compelled! :wink:
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#18 Post by Nothing »

james wrote:Has anybody here seen Los Bastardos yet? It's receiving many comparisons to Bruno Dumont and was in Un certain regard in Cannes 2008, so I will probably try to see it.
According to Escalante, The Great Ecstasy of Robert Carmichael is one of the biggest cinematic influences on this film. The opening shot is certainly a homage.
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Michael Kerpan
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#19 Post by Michael Kerpan »

kinjitsu wrote:Feel compelled! :wink:
Nope. My theory is that I look for films to "love". If I decide I love a film, it means I find something uniquely valuable (and pleasing -- in one way or another). Once, I put a film in the loved class, I rarely worry much about rating it against other loved films. I have some honorary favorites (for situations when a trotting out a few top favorites is obligatory), but that's usually as far as I go. (Perhaps a bit inconsistently, I will (sort of) grade films of a particular director from time to time).

Since Still walking and Dear Enemy both made it (easily) into my loved class, I'm not playing favorites.
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kinjitsu
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#20 Post by kinjitsu »

That was a teaser, Michael, hence the wink.

Anyhow, if he's at all interested in Koreeda, I highly recommend that james see Still Walking .
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#21 Post by The Fanciful Norwegian »

james wrote:What to see besides 35 rhums and perhaps Still Walking or United Red Army?
Crude Oil. Be sure you get there on time, no one will be admitted to the theater after the first seven hours.

(In all seriousness I would recommend seeing at least part of it -- Wang's West of the Tracks was staggering in more ways than one, and the chances to see his films in the U.S. don't come around very often. I don't know how the LAFF will be setting it up, but apparently other festival screenings of Crude Oil have been a sort of installation setting where people can come and go as they please.)
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#22 Post by Adam »

I'm going to see some docs. I counted at least ten films in my first pass through the list of films that i'd like to see.

My organization, Filmforum, is co-sponsoring the Crude Oil screening. It will be free at some other venue, and the schedule lists it as screening over 4 days, but I still don't know what the other venue is.
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#23 Post by Doug Cummings »

Indeed--James, I don't know what you consider a good line-up, but there are at least a dozen films at first glance that I consider must-sees this year (not bad for a smaller festival), and a lot more I still have to research:

-Musica Nocturna
-The Silence Before Bach
-United Red Army
-Turistas (Alicia Scherson)
-A Week Alone (Celina Munga)
-Elementary Training for Actors (Martin Rejtman)
-My Dear Enemy
-Our Beloved Month of August
-Crude Oil
-35 Shots of Rum
-Still Walking

The emphasis on Mexican documentaries sounds fascinating.
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Re: 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival

#24 Post by Adam »

Adam wrote:I'm going to see some docs. I counted at least ten films in my first pass through the list of films that i'd like to see.

My organization, Filmforum, is co-sponsoring the Crude Oil screening. It will be free at some other venue, and the schedule lists it as screening over 4 days, but I still don't know what the other venue is.
OK, it's actually playing as an installation at the UCLA Hammer Museum, gallery 6, from 11:30 am to 6:30 pm as follows:

June 24 - part 1
June 25 - part 2
June 26 - part 1
June 27 - part 2
And it's free.
So I expect at least six hours of viewing from all the LA board denizens!
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